Sorry, Max but I think you and your whole unit are wrong in what they are doing and that it does indeed have an affect on the careers of the service members working in your organization.
SupersonicMax said:
Because it is mandated it makes it a good tool? Again, the fact that entire units don't use it is probably a good indicator that it is not suitable for what it is meant. PDRs are mandatory sure. Just like many other things we don't follow to the letter.
And just because you and your organization have failed to use this tool, does not make that right. If this is just a small indication of what your organization fails to comply with, there may be some very serious problems there. Time will tell.
SupersonicMax said:
PDRs are not used for career advancement (read promotion boards). PERs are. I have seen one individual try to grieve a PER because he did not have PDRs written. Since we tend to over-evaluate people, he did not have a leg to stand on: his bullets were mostly Above average, never below average. His potential was the same. Still not enough for an immediate or a ready but according to his PER, he was doing what was expected of him and a little more. The lack of PDR did not interfere with where we thought he ranked. In this case, he was clearly trying to play the system to get ahead. Still didn't work.
This is where you have made one very large mistake. As mentioned, the PDR's lead up to the PER, giving the PER author an indication of how to evaluate the person being written up. That is but half of what the PDR system does. The PDR interviews will indicate to the member where they are doing well and where they may or do need to improve. If this is all documented in the PDR's on the member, then the example of your member grieving a PER should not happen, as the member has been counselled on their shortcomings. If you and your organization can not document, document, document; then you will see more grievances.
SupersonicMax said:
Or you can award the Person of the month award for whatever level you lead. Or you can do this verbally with the individual on a regular basis. PDRs are a lazy way to recognize your people.
You have missed the whole object of what the PDR system is all about. It is to document the members performance and progression in Trade and the CAF. What is "LAZY" is a supervisor who can not do the simple administration to ensure that their personnel have their personal files kept up to date, and reflecting their performance and progression. Don't forget, you still have to council your members individually on their PDR.
SupersonicMax said:
I had a teacher in University that would invite students with marks greater than 90% for a diner (after each exams). He would announce when he gave the exams back who would go for dinner. Very small gesture that most people appreciated greatly. Way better than a piece of paper telling you you are doing well.
This is not university. Our troops don't need a 'token pat on the head'. They need proper Course Reports, proper filing of their achievements in their Pers files, and often that piece of paper to hang on their walls. If you haven't noticed, in today's world, our Government places a lot of worth in those pieces of paper that people hang on their walls, but NOTHING for that "atta boy pat on the back".
SupersonicMax said:
In the end, because we are mandated to do it doesn't mean it's the right way to do it. I personally find PDRs a bit of a waste of time, even though I do them....
Again, I point out to you and your organization, the PDR and PER system are not what is wrong; but your complacency and lazy act of not properly keeping documentation on your personnel is what is truly wrong.